Chapter 14 Human Effects: Air Pollution and Heat Islands.

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Chapter 14 Chapter 14 Human Effects: Human Effects: Air Pollution and Heat Islands Air Pollution and Heat Islands

Transcript of Chapter 14 Human Effects: Air Pollution and Heat Islands.

Page 1: Chapter 14 Human Effects: Air Pollution and Heat Islands.

Chapter 14Chapter 14

Human Effects:Human Effects:Air Pollution and Heat IslandsAir Pollution and Heat Islands

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Air pollution concerns the introduction ofundesirable gases and particulates by humans.

Particulates (aerosols) are solid and liquid materialsin the air that are of natural or anthropogenic origin.

Pollutants can be divided into two categories:

Primary pollutants are emitted directly into the atmosphere.Secondary pollutants result from chemical transformations.

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Amounts and sources of atmospheric pollutants.

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Several different processes remove particulates from the air.

Gravitational settling, the process wherein they fall from the air, effectively removes larger particulates.

Scavenging is the process in which falling precipitationcollides with particulates and carries them to the surface.

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Carbon monoxide is a colorless, odorless gas.

Exposure for three hours at 400 ppm is life-threatening,and at 1600 ppm death occurs within an hour.

The most important source of CO in the U.S. is the automobile.

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Threshold Levels of Carbon Monoxide

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Sulfur dioxide is a primary pollutant released mainly by theburning of sulfur-containing fossil fuels, such as coal and oil.

It is a colorless but highly corrosive gasthat irritates human respiratory systems.

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Sulfur trioxide combines with water droplets to form sulfuric acid.

If this process occurs near the surface, it forms acid fog.

If it occurs in clouds, subsequent precipitation ofthe acid compound produces acid rain.

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Acid precipitation is a serious problem in the Northeast.

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Nitrogen dioxide is relatively toxic, causing serious pulmonary health problems; is corrosive; and undergoes

transformations that contribute to acid deposition and other secondary pollutants. It also gives polluted air a yellowish to

reddish brown color, as in this photo of Hong Kong.

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Volatile organic compounds (VOC) or hydrocarbons,are materials made entirely of carbon and hydrogen atoms.

Industrial activities account for the greatest proportionof anthropogenic hydrocarbons in the U.S.

While they pose no direct adverse health impacts, in the presence of sunlight they recombine with

nitrogen oxides and oxygen to produce photochemical smog.

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Photochemical smog forms when sunlight triggersreactions and transformations of gases and aerosols.

Negative effects include burning eyes, sore lungs,and an unpleasant odor with poor visibility.

Los Angeles-type smog (above) usually involves dry air while

London-type smog combines smoke and damp air.

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Ozone is the most important agent of photochemical smog, causing serious physical and environmental harm, includinginflammation of air passages that can reduce lung capacity

by as much as 20 percent.

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Strong winds rapidly transport emissions from their sourceand spread them over a wide horizontal extent with the

concentration of pollution inversely proportional to wind speed.

High wind speeds also lower pollution concentration indirectly.

Short-term variations in wind direction also affect dispersion.

If wind directions are highly variable,pollutants will spread over a wider area.

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In (a) the wind blows at 5 m/sec so that each puff of smoke travels 5 m before the next is released. In (b) the wind flows twice as fast as in (a),and the distance between successive puffs of smoke likewise doubles.

Thus, the greater wind speed in (b) causes the same amount of pollutionto be diluted within twice as large a volume of air.

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Stable air resists vertical displacement and leads tohigher pollutant concentrations near the ground.

Unstable air enhances vertical mixing,reducing pollution concentrations near the surface.

Inversions make the air extremely stable and imposethe greatest restraint on vertical mixing, with the

impact on pollution concentrations occurring in the morning.

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The term urban heat island implies that urban areas oftenhave higher temperatures than adjacent countrysides as aresult of natural surfaces being paved and built upon, andhuman activities releasing heat into the local environment.

The highest temperatures are normally foundwithin the city core.

Urban–rural temperature differences are greatest duringthe late evening and night and during the winter months.

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As incoming radiation contacts a building, some is scattered in all directionsand some is absorbed. The scattered radiation may in turn hit an adjacent

building where further absorption can take place, lowering the urban albedo.

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Increased particulates associated with urban activity canabsorb and scatter incoming solar radiation and

also increase the amount of absorption and reradiationof longwave energy in the atmosphere.

The increase in particulates can also increase cloud cover.

Precipitation can decrease downwind of urban centersas cloud water is spread over many condensation nuclei,which lessens the chance of growth to precipitation size.

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The next chapter examines Earth’s climates.